Retired Philadelphia Police Captain Ray Lewis reflects on the sense of suffering that drew him to participate, reacts to the conduct of the police officer who pepper-sprayed Occupiers on the UC Davis campus and criticizes the conduct of New York Mayor Michael Bloomberg. Lewis talks about the series of strategic meetings among officials that led to the destruction of Zuccotti Park, saying, “Everybody was involved, and every angle was covered, and at the end of it, he put his stamp on it. He is responsible.”
23 November 11
Retired Philadelphia Police Captain Ray Lewis reflects on the sense of suffering that drew him to participate, reacts to the conduct of the police officer who pepper-sprayed Occupiers on the UC Davis campus and criticizes the conduct of New York Mayor Michael Bloomberg. Lewis talks about the series of strategic meetings among officials that led to the destruction of Zuccotti Park, saying, “Everybody was involved, and every angle was covered, and at the end of it, he put his stamp on it. He is responsible.”
Retired Philadelphia Police Captain Ray Lewis relates how he kept a low profile among protesters in Zuccotti Park, questions the conduct of white-shirt police officers in terms of how they engaged with the protesters rather than supervising from a distance and reflects on how his act of civil disobedience led to his own arrest: “The moment that I was walking across that intersection was the proudest moment of my life.”
23 November 11
Retired Philadelphia Police Captain Ray Lewis relates how he kept a low profile among protesters in Zuccotti Park, questions the conduct of white-shirt police officers in terms of how they engaged with the protesters rather than supervising from a distance and reflects on how his act of civil disobedience led to his own arrest: “The moment that I was walking across that intersection was the proudest moment of my life.”